Showing posts with label The Addams Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Addams Family. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

TERROR TEE-VEE: A Countdown to Halloween (Day 18)







 THE ADDAMS FAMILY

Taking Charles Addams’ morbid sense of humor where America wasn't quite ready for it—in the living room and loud enough for all ears to hear and eyes to see was The Addams Family.

The show aired for two seasons on ABC from September 18th of 1964 until April 8, 1966, for 64 episodes.  Vic Mizzy wrote the very recognizable theme for the show.

Very wealthy, endlessly enthusiastic and madly in love with his wife is Gomez Addams, played by John Astin.  Morticia, played by Carolyn Jones, is a very worldly, warm vamp in all skin tight black and long black hair.  Wednesday (Lisa Loring) and Pugsley (Ken Weatherwax) are their morbidly rambunctious children.  Jackie Coogan’s Uncle Fester and Blossom Rock was Grandma—each also kooky residents of the gloomy mansion at 0001 Cemetery Lane.  The very large and sedate Lurch, played superbly by Ted Cassidy, was their butler.  And then the real weirdos show up in a disembodied hand known as Thing and Cousin Itt, a walking hairball round out the cast.

Like The Munsters, the humor for this series comes from the clash of their personal culture with that of the  rest of the world.  Despite their ghoulish appearance and dark view on the world, they are nice people.

My Top 6 Choice Episodes
are as follows…


“The Addams Family Tree”
Season 1, Episode 5




“Halloween with the Addams Family”
Season 1, Episode 7




“Lurch Learns to Dance”
Season 1, Episode 13




“Amnesia in the Addams Family”
Season 1, Episode 22




“Lurch, the Teenage Idol”
Season 1, Episode 33




“Halloween—Addams Style”
Season 2, Episode 7




Thursday, October 9, 2014

COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 9): AND NOW A BRIEF WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR...

You know how, when on a Halloween of trick-or-treating, you'd come across the house that had left the porch light on even though they weren't home at the time?

How they'd leave a bowl of candy out for the taking by any group of kids who would come by?  How they may have left a note reading something to the effect of how the reader should only take one piece of candy?

Well, I'm doing that tonight.
I'm going to trust you rambunctious kids to do the right thing.

Leave some for the next kid...

HULK SMASH CANDY HOG!!!

I'll be back tomorrow night with more in my
Countdown of Horror Hosts as my part of the
COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN!


For now I leave you with this series
of images to haunt your nightmares
and confound your dreams:










Tuesday, October 9, 2012

MONSTER-MONTH: COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 9)

Today, we venture into the strange world of Hanna-Barbera Animation to visit with a robot who carries the burden of the name... Frankenstein!



FRANKENSTEIN, JR. AND THE IMPOSSIBLES were a pair of Hanna-Barbera cartoons packed into a half hour of television programming for the CBS television network.  It premiered September 10, 1966.



Similar to many of the animation company’s efforts, this series was shortlived--ending after an 18 episode run.  Frankenstein Jr. is actually the name of the gigantic robot created by Professor Conroy for his  boy genius son Buzz Conroy--apparently he didn’t grasp that Frankenstein was the creator not the creation.



Set in Civic City, the adventures of young Buzz and Frankenstein, Jr. as they fight supervillains in the name of justice.  Buzz would activate his pal, “Frankie”, via an energy ring.  Frankenstein, Jr. is very similar in appearance to the very popular animated character GIGANTOR, who had a hit show at the time.



Frankie was voiced by Ted Cassidy (Lurch of THE ADDAMS FAMILY).  Buzz was voiced by Dick Beals, also famous for the voice of Chuck Jones’ Ralph Phillips for Warner Bros. and Davey of DAVEY & GOLIATH.



The target of complaints about violence in children’s television, the show was cancelled in 1968.


FIVE FRANKENSTEIN FUN FACTS:
  1. Gold Key Comics released a single issue of FRANKENSTEIN JR. AND THE  IMPOSSIBLES in 1966 as a tie-in to the TV show.  The contents of it were reprinted in “The Impossibles Annual” by Atlas Publishing & Distributing Co. Ltd., in 1968 in the United Kingdom.
  2. In 1976, Space Ghost and Frankenstein Jr. were repackaged and combined together into a single cartoon series entitled SPACE GHOST/ FRANKENSTEIN JR. SHOW for NBC.
  3. Ted Cassidy also voiced the role of Ben Grimm aka The Thing in the 1978 FANTASTIC FOUR animated series and went on  to voice and announce for animated shows like GODZILLA, THE HULK, SUPER FRIENDS and voicing the opening narration of the 1970s THE INCREDIBLE HULK.
  4. FRANKENSTEIN JR. and THE IMPOSSIBLES is available via Warner Bros. and print  on demand.
  5. Frankenstein Jr. or “Frankie” as he is referred to by Buzz, stands 30 feet tall.

And now, some merchandise featuring Frankie Jr...

(Click to Frankensize)

(Click to Frankensize)

(Click to Frankensize)

(Click to Frankensize)

(Click to Frankensize)




And now, some art featuring FRANKENSTEIN JR.
(Click any to Frankensize)






Links to follow Frankie Jr. with:






And now, because THAT GUY demanded it:

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

MONSTER-MONTH: COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 3)

For our third focus on Frankenstein's Monster, we must take a closer look
at the most benevolent of the Frankenstein Monsters, Fred Gwynne's
HERMAN MUNSTER!

(Click to Frankensize)

The comedicaly gifted Fred Gwynne was an actor, author and artist, but he left his mark as Herman, head of the Munsters family.  His version of the Monster was, in a word, goofy.  And it was that goofiness, that childlike awkwardness that would endear him to his audience.  If he weren’t so harmlessly goofy, his temper tantrums and larger than life expressions may’ve come off as scary to the intended audience.  He was, after all, a huge presence with all of the padding and heavy boots strapped to his six foot five inch frame topped off with green make-up and neck bolts, the seven foot tall Herman Munster could’ve been a true terror.

Of all the post-Karloff Monsters, Fred Gwynne’s comes the closest to the classic Universal look--in fact, it is so similar that a few adjustments to the make-up (darkening under the eyes, furrowing of the thick brow and an expressionless stare) and one could easily see Gwynne as a serious Frankenstein Monster.  I mean look at this expression here and tell me that it doesn’t project “sinister”:

(Click for Frankensize)

Anyway, as I was saying, THE MUNSTERS’ Herman was safe in attempting to pull off the universally known look of the UNIVERSAL PICTURES’ Frankenstein Monster because they were also owned by that very same picture company.  No threat to the copyright and so they had a free pass.


FIVE FRANKENSTEIN FUN FACTS:
  1. Gwynne’s Monster had one brown eye and one chartreuse.
  2. Herman Munster was a fan of Huckleberry Hound and Pat Boon albums.
  3. Herman Munster was built in Germany by a Dr. Frankenstein, but was adopted at an early age and raised in Shroudshire, England by a family named Munster.
  4. The idea of a family of funny monsters was first submitted to Universal Studios in the late 1940s by animator Bob Clampett, who wanted to make a cartoon series.  The project wasn’t developed until the early ‘60s, when ROCKY & BULLWINKLE writers Burns and Hayward submitted a similar treatment.  Norm Liebman and Ed Haas wrote the pilot script, “Love Thy Monster” when it was still undecided if the show would be live-action or animated.
  5. Herman Munster is a U.S. Army veteran of Wrold War II.


Citations...



(Click to Frankensize)


This is an interesting final note--the test pilot for THE MUNSTERS that was never used.  Interestingly, it was shot full color (the show itself doesn’t even use color, but for the test pilot they go with color?).  Nonetheless, it is an unfinished, unpolished dress-rehersal where the interaction between the characters, their make-up and the tone of the show is  sampled.

It comes off as darker, by far, than the final product.  Perhaps more in the vein of THE ADDAMS FAMILY than they wanted.  Yvonne De Carlo’s Lily Munster does not appear, instead Herman is married to a Vampira look-alike named Phoebe played by Joan Marshall.  Eddie in this piece is played viciously by Happy Derman--surely his take was a little too scary for what the show was to become.

Neat stuff, check it out...


Gwynne retained fond recollections of Herman, saying in later life, "... I might as well tell you the truth. I love old Herman Munster. Much as I try not to, I can't stop liking that fellow."

(Click to Frankensize)


As you may or may not know I do enjoy the heck out of the old horror films that Turner Classic Movies provides we humble viewers with every October, so I will be including (when I can remember it) listings of the night’s treats and boy are there a few grand ones on tonight:


Wednesday, October 3, 2012

8pm
THE MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM (1933)


9:30pm
DOCTOR X (1932)


11:00pm
MARK OF THE VAMPIRE (1935)


12:15am
HOUSE OF DRACULA (1945)


1:30am
ZOMBIES OF MORA TAU (1957)



2:45am
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968)



4:30am
I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE (1943)




And one more thing...?